the two things that jump out at me are that you need to substitute your nat address for the public address in the commands that he gave you and you also need to get rid of the 6to4 address you have assigned and use an address from your routed /64

Hi. Could you give the specific netsh command you used to"and then assigned 2001:470:1f08:181a::32001:470:1f08:181a::3 to the 192.168.1.101 interface;)" ?Do you mean that you essentially set 2001:470:1f08:181a::3 as a gateway in the 192.168.1.101 network adapter under the Advanced tab?

I too have a set of netsh commands given after my tunnel was created, on my Win7 Ultimate x64 PC, which I have not yet issued as I'm concerned about how to reset this if I wanted to later.

I assume that, with more than 1 PC on the router, the local address (I have static private ipv4 addresses for all PC's)the 2 netsh commands with 192.168.1.101 would be run with these different private addresses? I.e., there should be no problem with multiple PCs using the same tunnel?

Right now, on my D-Link DIR-825 router, I can ping ipv6.google.com just fine, but cannot access that site from my WIn7 (chrome) browser. (On a remote Linode VPS, which has true ipv6 running, I can access that site just fine.)

I assume that, with more than 1 PC on the router, the local address (I have static private ipv4 addresses for all PC's)the 2 netsh commands with 192.168.1.101 would be run with these different private addresses? I.e., there should be no problem with multiple PCs using the same tunnel?

I'm sort of confused by this. You can use Router Advertisements or DHCP to assign addresses for multiple computers.

Oh, fcpk, you shouldn't use that ::3 address you did. It may work, but HE doesn't delegate DNS for those addresses (because it's part of your tunnel /64) You should pull an address from your routed /64 (check your tunnel page for details) and use that

Yes, this seems to work. That is, from two PCs behind the router I now can reach http://ipv6.google.com . I didn't understand why there would be a 5th netsh command; apparently there is not, as the command you cited,netsh interface ipv6 add address IP6Tunnel 2001:470:1f08:181a::2was already included in fcpk's first post.

I notice that http://test-ipv6.com gives me the same report as before I had this tunnel:10/10 for your IPv4 stability and readiness, when publishers offer both IPv4 and IPv60/10 for your IPv6 stability and readiness, when publishers are forced to go IPv6 onlyI guess that is expected since I am using a tunnel? I am using OpenDNS ipv6 name servers2620:0:ccc::22620:0:ccd::2Are these OK, or should I use (only) the one provided by tunnelbroker2001:470:20::2

I have a query on the addresses assigned to me by tunnelbroker. The address I used in my netsh commands, which seem to work, is under the section IPv6 Tunnel Endpoints. There is another (assign /48) address under the section Routed IPv6 Prefixes, which I assume is just for my information, not used in any of my settings?

Is there any other service that can do this automatically? For example, I use OpenDNS's client software that automatically updates my ISP IPv4 address. Or, do you suggest some other command line to run the above https address/command on some schedule?

I guess the ipv6 connection can be slow and not available quickly at times; there was a Linode post on some cases. Right now, http://test-ipv6.com and http://testipv6.com both report 10/10 for both ipv4 and ipv6 stability.